Francais | English | Espanõl

Gateway National Recreation Area

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search
Gateway National Recreation Area
IUCN Category V (Protected Landscape/Seascape)
Gateway National Recreation Area
Location: New York & New Jersey, USA
Nearest city: New York City, New York
Area: 26,607 acres (107.67 km²)
Established: October 27, 1972
Visitation: 8,294,353 (in 2005)
Governing body: National Park Service

Gateway National Recreation Area is a 26,607 acre (107.67 km²) National Recreation Area owned by the United States government in the New York City metropolitan area. The park comprises four separate units located in three boroughs of New York City and central New Jersey and is managed by the National Park Service. Three of the four units include popular swimming beaches. The area drew more than 8 million visitors in 2005.


  • Jamaica Bay Unit includes much of the shoreline below the Shore Parkway beginning at Plum Beach and ending at Kennedy International Airport. In addition, several dozen islands in Jamaica Bay along with the water itself, is designated the only "wildlife refuge" in the National Park System (usually, "wildlife refuges" are a US Fish & Wildlife Service function). Image:GRNAlandscapes.JPG It is a tidal estuary on the south part of Brooklyn and Queens.The unit has a visitors center named for William Fitts Ryan (the congressman who championed Gateway's creation) that has been under development for many years at the historic former airport - Floyd Bennett Field. A visitor contact station specifically for the wildlife refuge is accessible nearby by automobile and subway, which is within walking distance to the trail system on the main island. This is the only portion of the refuge accessible to the general public. The 9,000-plus acre refuge includes much of the waters and almost all of the remaining marsh islands in Jamaica Bay, which are protected. Access to the other islands is prohibited. This is the only unit that does not have beaches. Fishing, nature-viewing, aviation history, photography, boating, cycling, and sailing are the most popular activities within this unit.
  • Breezy Point Unit is located on Breezy Point in Queens. It stretches to the tip of Rockaway Point and includes Jacob Riis Park and Fort Tilden, each with districts listed in the National Register of Historic Places. It preserves, in part, some of the last remaining natural dunes in the area, and is home to at least two endangered species (piping plover, and beach tiger beetle). The life-guarded beach and historic Bath House area in the summer months receive most of this unit's annual visitation. Fishing, swimming, nature-viewing, cycling, and sunbathing are the most popular activities.
  • Staten Island Unit is located on the south shore of Staten Island within Lower New York Bay. It includes Fort Wadsworth, an historic collection of masonry fortifications on the site of much earlier fortifications; Miller Field, an historic former airfield south of New Dorp; as well as Great Kills Park on Great Kills Harbor - which includes a marina concession. Also within this unit are Hoffman and Swinburne Island. Organized sports, nature-viewing, sailing, boating, sunbathing and military history are the most popular activities.

[edit] External links


National Recreation Areas of the United States

Administered by the National Park Service
 Amistad | Big South Fork | Bighorn Canyon | Boston Harbor Islands | Chattahoochee River | Chickasaw | Curecanti | Delaware Water Gap | Gateway | Gauley River | Glen Canyon | Golden Gate | Lake Chelan | Lake Mead | Lake Meredith | Lake Roosevelt | Mississippi | Ross Lake | Santa Monica Mountains | Whiskeytown-Shasta-Trinity  
Administered by other agencies
 Arapaho | Flaming Gorge | Grand Island | Hells Canyon | Land Between The Lakes | Mount Baker | Mount Rogers | Oregon Dunes | Pine Ridge | Rattlesnake | Sawtooth | Smith River | Spring Mountains | Spruce Knob-Seneca Rocks | White Rocks | Winding Stair Mountain  

Personal tools